COVID-19 Vaccination Outcomes and Antibiotic Crisis and Overuse During the COVID-19 Pandemic in Bosnia and Herzegovina. 2022

Vedad Dedic, and Armin Sljivo, and Alen Arnautovic, and Ahmed Mulac
Health Center of Sarajevo Canton, Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina.

COVID-19 has different presentations from mild flu like symptoms such as anosmia, dysgeusia, fever, sore throat, cough, dyspnea, headache, abdominal pain and diarrhoea to severe COVID-19 with the development of acute respiratory syndrome (ARDS), septic shock, metabolic acidosis, coagulation dysfunction, multiorgan failure or even death. The aim of this research project was to present and highlight the outcomes of the vaccination against COVID-19 and the widespread use of antibiotics during the initial admission and treatment of COVID-19 patients in out of hospital settings. This observational cross-sectional study was conducted between September 1st and September 24th 2021, during the fourth wave of COVID-19 outbreak in Bosnia and Herzegovina, among the patients admitted to the primary health care COVID-19 centre of Canton Sarajevo in Bosnia and Herzegovina. Patients were mostly female 213 (53.3%), with a mean age of 48.8±18.6, with hypertension 129 (32.3%) or diabetes mellitus 35 (8.7%) as comorbidities and being COVID-19 unvaccinated 236 (59.0%) COVID-19 unvaccinated patients expressed more fever (X 2=9.93, p<0.05), had typical COVID-19 chest X ray presentation (X 2=6.08, p<0.05) and abnormal lung auscultation sounds (X 2=5.43, p<0.05). Out of all patients, 312 (78.0%) have received antibiotics and 3 (0.75%) antivirotics such as favipiravir as therapy for the treatment of COVID-19. The mean duration of the antibiotic regime was 10.2 ± 7.5 days with a minimum of 3 days and maximum of 62 days. The minimum CRP value when antibiotics were prescribed was 0.1 (ref. value <5mg/l). The most prescribed antibiotic was doxycycline 172 (43.0%), followed by ceftriaxone 139 (34.7%) and azithromycin 108 (27.0%). Our study showed that vaccination acts protective for the development of severe COVID-19 forms, as well as that antibiotics were overused among COVID-19 infected. The outcome of such malpractice could lead to antimicrobial resistance which will be seen in further years. Governmental agencies should advise physicians to change these trends.

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